home + design spa life
CirCular reasoning With a commanding vieW of columbus circle and central park, this top-floor residence needed to combine cosmopolitan space-coziness With elegance, While using minimal materials and space separations by matt scanlon
t h o u g h t h e re a re d oze n s o f
examples from ancient history of buildings one hundred feet tall or higher, from North America’s La Venta Pyramid (110 feet) constructed in 900 B.C. to the 160foot Colosseum in Rome (begun in 80 A.D.) to Asia’s Ruwanwelisaya stupa in Sri Lanka (383 feet, 150 B.C.), and of course Egypt’s 4,500-year-old Great Pyramid of Giza, at a still-overwhelming 451 feet. Almost universally, however, tall ancient structures were used for either
•
photos by tuca reinés
civic or religious purposes, and not for general habitation. The first instance we know of multiple-story purely residential living are the tower houses of Shibam in Yemen, which date to 1600 A.D. Made of sun-dried mud bricks, they were erected up to seven stories tall—a considerable architectural achievement given the lack of an internal supporting structure—and one wonders at the thrill and wonder felt by the top-floor dweller, sensations largely unchanged in the centuries since.
In designing tall residential buildings, and in redesigning residential spaces within them, architects are posed not just with the challenge of instilling the idea of sanctuary in locations at least conceptually at odds with such a concept, but also with the need to make the most of often compact layouts and square-footage. In finding ways to completely renovate this top-floor residence overlooking Columbus Circle and Central Park, Spacesmith’s Michel Franck and design
120 industrym.com | march/april 2016
NTL_0304_HomeDesign_ColumbusCircleFINAL.indd 120
3/16/16 6:57 P